J u ly / a u g u s t 2 0 1 7 2 5 from top left: megan dunlap; us archives; courtesy saddleback; hinckleyyachts; disney; megan dunlap When he’s not at Disneyland, Walt Disney Co. CEO Bob Iger’s nir- vana is aboard his Hinckley yacht, Aquarius, made at Hinckley’s boat yard in Northeast Harbor.“No mat- ter where a Hinckley sails, she al- ways remains tethered to the heri- tage and the heart of the Maine coast,” Iger wrote for Vanity Fair in 2014. If recent rumors are to be believed, Iger’s gaze is set on wid- er horizons. CNBC just reported that he’s considering a run for pres- idency in 2020. Hey, all bets are off these days. Taking the Helm There’s hope on the horizon for Maine’s ski bums. Saddle- back Mountain Resort, which has been shuttered the past two winters, has just been bought by Australian developers, The Majella Group. Majella has quickly announced they can’t promise a Fall 2017 reopening. Here’s hoping. Rainy day at camp? Grab an opponent and absorb yourselves in a game of cribbage on one of these canoe-shaped boards ($25.95, LL Bean), reminiscent of boats crafted by the Penobscot Tribe. Did you know? Competitive cribbage was legalized in Maine last year after changes to gambling laws made the traditional card and board game illegal in 2008. Well, she was a frequent visi- tor, anyway. Earhart was an in- vestor, and chief poster pilot, of the Boston-Maine Airways, later named Northeast Airlines. She was also a close friend of Phillips Payson and a regular guest at his home in Falmouth Foreside. A controversial photo reignited interest in her disappearance in recent weeks. Founded in 1926, Len Libby’s Chocolates was born in the kitchen of its founder, a polymath who taught Westbrook’s first son Rudy Vallee how to tickle the ivories. The chocolatier has just released everybody’s favorite gift–a mouthwatering rendering of the State of Maine, with islands of smaller bites in milk and dark chocolate. $16.